Handbuch der Spectroscopie | Nature


Play all audios:

Loading...

ABSTRACT THERE are comparatively few men of science who can accurately handle a spectroscope and interpret its indications with assurance. The number of chemists, for instance, who could


look at the spectrum of a Geissler tube, and pick out at once the lines of hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen or carbon, is probably very small. No one denies the importance of the spectroscopic


method, but its practice requires so long an apprenticeship and so severe a training, while the experimental facts are so numerous and the pit-falls so plentiful, that the physicists and


chemists are inclined to shirk the whole subject and to leave it to the few who happen to have been brought up in a spectroscopic atmosphere. _Handbuch der Spectroscopie_. By H. Kayser.


Professor of Physics at the University of Bonn. Vol. i. Pp. xxiv + 782. 251 figures. (Leipzig: Hirzel, 1900.) Access through your institution Buy or subscribe This is a preview of


subscription content, access via your institution ACCESS OPTIONS Access through your institution Subscribe to this journal Receive 51 print issues and online access $199.00 per year only


$3.90 per issue Learn more Buy this article * Purchase on SpringerLink * Instant access to full article PDF Buy now Prices may be subject to local taxes which are calculated during checkout


ADDITIONAL ACCESS OPTIONS: * Log in * Learn about institutional subscriptions * Read our FAQs * Contact customer support Authors * ARTHUR SCHUSTER View author publications You can also


search for this author inPubMed Google Scholar RIGHTS AND PERMISSIONS Reprints and permissions ABOUT THIS ARTICLE CITE THIS ARTICLE SCHUSTER, A. _Handbuch der Spectroscopie_ . _Nature_ 63,


317–318 (1901). https://doi.org/10.1038/063317a0 Download citation * Issue Date: 31 January 1901 * DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/063317a0 SHARE THIS ARTICLE Anyone you share the following


link with will be able to read this content: Get shareable link Sorry, a shareable link is not currently available for this article. Copy to clipboard Provided by the Springer Nature


SharedIt content-sharing initiative